Melbourne Public Meeting:
EYEWITNESS ACCOUNT of the protests at the G8 Summit in Genoa

7.00PM RMIT
Wednesday, August 8
Meeting Rooms C and D
Building 8, Level 3
Turn Left at the bottom of the ramp,
from the main Swanston St entrance

THE ROAD FROM GENOA:
WHERE NOW FOR THE ANTI-CAPITALIST MOVEMENT?

Statement of Workers Power Global
22 July 2001
http://www.workerspower.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

1. The anti-G8 protest in Genoa was the biggest summit protest yet. Between
150,000-200,000 participated on the final day (J21). This included large
numbers of trade unionists from all the major Italian union confederations and
masses of supporters of Rifondazione Comunista. It was also the most violent
yet - with the police, carabinieri and anti-terrorist squads conducting a
campaign of terror not seen since the days of Mussolini. Unarmed protester
Carlo Giuliani was shot dead. Mass, peaceful marches were deliberately attacked
with batons and teargas. During the post-demonstration "sweep" by police,
systematic use of extreme violence and even torture have occurred.

2. Against this premeditated brutalisation, protesters have every right to
fight back. Those in the movement who have focused condemnation on the "black
bloc" are wrong: the police raid on the GSF, the deliberate police tactic of
pushing of the black bloc into the non-violent demo, the appearance of police
agents dressed as block blockers...all these show that terror on a mass scale
is targeted at the non-violent protesters too. It is aimed at breaking up the
movement precisely at the point where it threatens to sink roots into the
population.

3. 50,000 marched to defend immigrant rights on J19, 70,000 marched to besiege
the "red zone" on J20 and 200,000 people marched in Genoa on J21 - all in
defiance of incredible harassment and violation of their democratic rights.
These huge numbers are what Blair, Chirac and Berlusconi are really frightened
of. They are terrified that the slum dwellers of the cities and the bullied and
regimented workers will unite with our "travelling circus" of anticapitalists.
That is why they pressed the Start button for a repression that, reportedly,
has even shocked hardened murderers like Bush and Putiin.

4. For all these reasons Genoa represents a crossroads for the movement. It can
become - as the radical movements of the late 1960s did - a detonator for mass
working class resistance. Or it can suffer the fate of the US Black Panthers,
who were systematically hunted down and imprisoned in order to strangle a
potential mass revolutionary movement. The chorus of the media blaming all the
violence on "handfulls of anarchists" or "the black block" indicates that the
forces of order are pursuing this latter strategy for all it is worth.

5. The capitalists' aim is to split the movement:
* to drive the mild-mannered NGO leaders back into futile negotiations behind
closed doors;
* to demoralise the NVDA "fluffy" protestors with the argument that, sadly,
violence is inevitable if you dare to "disobey" the state;
* and to isolate and crush the anarchist and socialist left.

Genoa saw significant mobilisations of the rank and file of the main Italian
trade unions plus the radical syndicalist federations like Cobas. In this sense
it is a great step forward from Prague and Gothenburg. It also saw delegations
of trade unionists from other European countries. However the main workers'
leaders seem to have succeeded in keeping the demonstration as an isolated
event and heading off more extensive national strike action. The world's rulers
hope that - by ensuring that violence was inevitable - the union bureaucrats
will take the excuse to stand aside.

6. This would be a terrible mistake, especially for Italian workers today.
Berlusconi and the state forces were clearly giving the entire working class a
serious warning. The brutality of the repression was meant to say: we are not
your "normal" post-war Italian government. We are coming for your social gains
and we have the force to impose our will. Of course this is a piece of
incredible arrogance. If the Italian working class were to rise up in a
militant and well protected general strike, the carabinieri and their gas
grenades and water cannon would be smashed.

7. But that's a big "if". Berlusconi's only hope is that he can, with the aid
of the cowardice of the union leaders, "salami" the workers, taking them on and
defeating them section by section. But the size and support of Genoa, on the
streets of the city too, indicates that ordinary working class people are
waking up to the danger that the crooked billionaire and his coalition of
criminals, racists, crypto-fascists and open fascists represents. Can the
radical forces in the unions, in Rifondazione, in the socialist and anarchist
youth give a lead without losing touch with the masses? There is good hope that
they can - if they learn the lessons of Genoa. If they do then another hot
autumn may be approaching in Italy.

8. For the worldwide anticapitalist movement the task of putting down roots has
become more possible...but also far more urgent. The rulers of the world have
upped the stakes. Now matter how brave and determined, better fighting tactics
will not solve the problem. At Genoa we implemented a mass direct
action/organised self defence strategy. That is, we organised for non-violent
civil disobedience on a huge scale but prepared organised self-defence groups:
these were intended to defend the demo from the police and to minimise
disruption to the agreed non-violent actions from futile black bloc actions or
deliberate police provocations. In the end this strategy was overwhelmed
because too few people adopted it-because it lacked sufficient co-ordination or
because it was only improvised it on the spot.

9. The Genoa Social Forum leaders adopted a pure non-violent strategy, which
did not work. The black bloc, a small minority however vigorous, were once
again diverted into the futile activity of smashing up property, which is
guaranteed to alienate not only the working class inhabitants and bystanders
but also to drive pacifist and reformist workers away from the movement.

10. This mass direct action/organised self-defence strategy remains the only
way to deal with police violence. Since the police will resort to brutal
violence-even against the most self-controlled pacifists there should always be
enough street fighting to occupy the most combative members of the black block.
What is needed is the conscious co-ordination of these forces so that the
police cannot use us against one another, so they cannot infiltrate agents
provocateurs, so that we do not alienate those we wish to win over. Indeed we
want them to join us in the streets so that we overwhelm the forces of order.
But on its own even this strategy of direct action and self-defence is not
enough.

11. When faced with repression on this scale - the effective suspension of
civil liberties across Italy; the suspension of free movement under the
Schengen treaty; suspension of the right to consult a lawyer; and a
fascist-style "night and fog" round up - a militant minority cannot defend
itself. Better fighting tactics, intelligence and appeals to the world for
solidarity are not enough. That is why we say: after Genoa...to the factories,
to the offices, to the working class and immigrant communities, to the schools.
The only way to sustain the movement's momentum now is through the tens of
thousands who demonstrated, the tens of thousands more who are in active
solidarity, to turn to the working class and take anti-capitalist politics and
methods into the workers' organisations.

12. The NGOs, the "fluffy" leaders and the ageing pop stars have an opposite
solution. When Naomi Klein called for the movement to "put down roots" after
May Day 2001 she had in mind a complete break from militant confrontation and
an appeal to the enlightened middle classes. Read also a break from socialist
and anarchist anti-capitalism, towards a liberal reformist critique of the
system. [Against this is must be said that José Bové, the radical farmers
leader and vice president of ATTAC put the blame for the violence fairly and
squarely on the state.]

13. In their own way, the leaders of the "radical reformist" wing are going
through the same trauma as every middle-class leadership of a revolutionary
movement in the last two centuries. They summoned us onto the streets to aid
their reform project, as a threat to the powers-that-be to negotiate seriously.
To keep control of a broad alliance they have to suppress the working class,
revolutionary wing. When it is not suppressed - or when the momentum of the
struggle puts them outside bourgeois legality - they walk away from the
movement. Since Gothenburg and Mayday 2001 we have seen the beginnings of this
response - and it will gain momentum in the days after Genoa.

14. But the NGO and reformist leaders are one thing, the activists who follow
their lead are another. Today, that layer of activists - which forms the bulk
of the protest movement - is faced with some searching questions.

• After Genoa, do you really think the capitalist state could be reformed? Do
you really believe it is a neutral instrument that can be won to defending our
rights and social gains? Or will we need a revolution to save the world from
eco-meltdown, starvation and war?

• After Genoa, has "disorganisation" proved effective? Should it be celebrated
as an antidote to bureaucracy? Or were the decisive forces the organised forces
- the police, the black bloc, the socialists, the unions?

• After Genoa, can you carry on going alone into the hell of teargas, batons
and bullets? Or will you go next time as part of an organised political force -
a revolutionary party? The police have helicopters - our only force-multiplier
is solidarity.

15. The first two years of our movement have been - as Susan George put it -
"the most beautiful hope for thirty years". The coming months will not be
beautiful. Because, to use a term from post-modernism, the capitalists can
"otherise" us, they can isolate us: make us look strange and alien to ordinary
workers. They can treat us as "extremists", "terrorists". Their police can
treat us a sub-humans. Not even prisoners of war; not even "war criminals" at
the Hague get treated this way. Despite the exhilaration and freedom that being
part of this movement brings, to the mass of working class people we may be
heroes - but distant ones. "They did well," millions of workers across the
world will say on Monday. But until "they" becomes "we" the movement will not
break through the mounting repression.

16. The media lies, the union leaders sabotage all attempts at solidarity, the
social-democratic politicians queue up to demand ever tougher police responses.
But after Genoa, denouncing them is not enough. Individual terrorism and
revenge would be the worst of all dead ends. The Italian and German radical
left was tempted into this by the state in the 1970s. We should reject that
path decisively. We need new tactics - based on the working class.

17. After Genoa the nearest workplace is more important than the next summit.
"Yourtown" is more important than Quatar or Washington. The multi-millioned
working class movement has the power to stop society. If it had chosen to use
that power, Genoa would be a police free zone today and the G8 summit venue a
smoking ruin. But to mobilise that power takes more than gestures: it takes
relentless, work to build and energise resistance in workplaces and
communities. And as well as bold offensives like Genoa, Seattle and Prague it
needs hard defensive struggles - against the growth of fascism in depressed
communities; against the death-penalty genocide on US blacks; against the
austerity packages that the IMF/World Bank is imposing on countries like
Argentina today.

18. With the workers who don't accept the need for self defence, or who call
for state repression of the black bloc, or who think civil disobedience
threatens hard won democratic rights, we need a hard but patient argument. We
need to show them in action they are wrong. We need unity in action - the
united front tactic that has always guided revolutionaries in their fight to
convince the majority of a socialist alternative. Individuals cannot operate
tactics - only organisations can. Individuals cannot assess the mood of
millions - only organisations with tens of thousands can.

19. That is why we say, with the gas of Genoa still in our lungs and our blood
still on the pavements: unite with us to build a new kind of party. It will not
be a bureaucratic monster if its members are clear as to their goals and
methods, if they can control and replace their leaders, if they operate the
fullest democracy when it comes to policy and the maximum unity when it comes
to action. A revolutionary working class party born out of the Seattle
generation can be free of all the filth of Stalinism.


20. The storm clouds are gathering: debt crisis looms in the big emerging
nations; banks are in "white knuckle" fear that the telecoms giants will
collapse, dragging the finance system with them; deeper recession is on the
way. The struggle will get harder and nastier. The Nazi posters on the walls of
Genoa's police cells point in one direction. So do the Star Wars rockets and
the death camps of Chechnya. In the other direction lies human freedom, and the
end of poverty, ignorance and war. In the global South the struggle against
corporate capitalism is on the march - from New Guinea to Argentina. We have to
link up with these struggles directly. The "Endless Summer" phase of the
movement is over. It's now a struggle for survival: we face either
marginalisation and repression or a mass breakout that can transform the
political situation in Europe.

Statement of Workers Power Global
22 July 2001
http://www.workerspower.com
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.destroyimf.org



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